Search:

Mon livre des visages = [board book] My face book.
Babies love looking at other babies and these charming baby faces will captivate and delight toddlers and babies. They will ask to look at the book again and again!
Subjects: Board books.; Juvenile works.; Literature.; Facial expression; Emotions; Infants; Face; Face perception in infants; French language materials;
Available copies: 2 / Total copies: 3
unAPI

Baby's day [videorecording]
Delights and fascinations using everyday sights and sound for babies. Follows babies through a typical day introducing various scenes of familiar objects, animated puppets, animal close-ups, and most importantly, other babies faces. Soothing symphonic sounds and soft voices recite prose and identifying objects on the screen to help with a baby's budding vocabulary.MPAA rating: Not rated.
Subjects: Animated films.; Children's films.; Puppet films.; Household sounds.; Infants; Infants; Visual learning; Visual perception in infants.; Word recognition.;
© 2003., Artisan Home Entertainment,
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
unAPI

Champions. by Lore, Danny,author.; Blee, Federico,color artist.(CARDINAL)603048; Cowles, Clayton,letterer.(CARDINAL)345817; Infante, Toni,cover art.; Vecchio, Luciano,artist.(CARDINAL)598779;
"The Champions tried fighting fair. Now it's time to fight dirty. The sinister corporation Roxxon is cheating the system to try to keep Kamala's Law on the books -- so the Champions' only option is to infiltrate the company and take it down from the inside! Who will become ... Roxxon's newest interns? Meanwhile, Roxxon's wildly popular app continues turning public perception against teen super heroes. Can the Champions wage war on a trend? In order to earn the trust of their cutthroat supervisors, the undercover Champions will have to deliver the company an unwilling spokesperson: Kamala Khan herself! What will it take for Ms. Marvel to agree to become the face of a company and a law that she hates? And how dirty will the team's hands get before all this is over?"--T+
Subjects: Comics (Graphic works); Graphic novels.; Novels.; Science fiction comics.; Superhero comics.; Heroes; Teenagers;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 2
unAPI

Sign with your baby : how to communicate with infants before they can speak / by Garcia, W. Joseph.(CARDINAL)726642; Garcia, W. Joseph.Toddler talk.;
Includes bibliographical references and (page 107) and index.
Subjects: Language acquisition; Sign language.;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 2
unAPI

Sign with your baby : how to communicate with infants before they can speak / by Garcia, W. Joseph.(CARDINAL)726642; Garcia, W. Joseph.Toddler talk.;
Includes bibliographical references and (page 107) and index.
Subjects: Language acquisition; Sign language.; American Sign Language.;
Available copies: 5 / Total copies: 8
unAPI

Survival of the prettiest : the science of beauty / by Etcoff, Nancy L.,1955-(CARDINAL)763126;
Includes bibliographical references (pages 289-310) and index.Introduction: the nature of beauty -- Beauty as bait -- Pretty pleases -- Cover me -- Feature presentation -- Size matters -- Fashion runaway.Beauty is not a myth. According to scientist and psychologist Nancy Etcoff, the pursuit of beauty is neither a cultural construction, an invention of Madison Avenue, nor a backlash against feminism. Survival of the Prettiest, the first in-depth scientific inquiry into the nature of human beauty, posits that beauty is an essential and ineradicable part of human nature, from what makes a face beautiful to the deepest questions about the human condition. Etcoff sheds light on every aspect of human beauty, including why we devour fashion magazines, check our waistlines, and gaze longingly at objects of desire. Informed by state-of-the-art theories of the human mind from cognitive science and evolutionary biology, Survival of the Prettiest tells us why gentlemen prefer blondes, why high heels have never gone out of style, why eyebrows are plucked and hair is coiffed. Etcoff also explains how sexual preference is guided by ancient rules that make us most attracted to those with whom we are most likely to reproduce. Research on why we find infant features irresistibly attractive, as well as controversial new work that suggests parents show more affection to attractive newborns, is part of a broad investigation that includes insights into how beauty influences our perceptions, attitudes, and behavior toward others.
Subjects: Beauty, Personal; Natural selection.; Sexual attraction.;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
unAPI